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‘Police can’t bury our girls for us’ – Families of Takoradi girls fume
Families of three of the missing Takoradi girls who were declared dead by police are still agitating for the release of the victims’ remains after the DNA test.
The families have made an appeal to the Inspector General of Police not to renege on his commitment to release the human parts for an independent DNA test.
A sister to one of the girls, Rebecca Quayson, said apart from being refused the remains, the families have also been refused hard copies of the initial police forensic results that confirmed the deaths of the girls, that had been missing for over a year.
She told Citi News that the families cannot have closure until they independently conduct DNA tests to corroborate or dispute the police report.
She said three families went to the Western Region police command and requested for the remains for “a second opinion and maybe burial.”
Rebecca Quayson thus urged Ghanaians to come to support their demands for the remains insisting that the police “can’t bury our girls for us.”
The missing girls were declared dead by police on August 15, 2019. The victims, Priscilla Bentum, Ryth Love Quayson, Priscilla Mantebea Kuranchie and Ruth Abakah were kidnapped in Takoradi in the Western Region between July and December 2018.
Three of human parts were found in a sewage system in Takoradi near the home of the main suspect in the case.
Police also later found a fourth set of human remains at Nkroful new site at Takoradi as part of their investigations drawing the family of another missing person, Ruth Abakah, into the case.
Samuel Udoetuk-Wills, the main suspect in the case, is already serving an 18-months sentence for escaping from jail after his initial arrest in connection with the kidnappings.
Source:Fiilafmonline/CitiNews